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About
The purpose is to determine if use of rectal spacers are effective at improving protection of rectum from high dose radiation, using rate of rectal ulceration as a surrogate measure of acute effects. It is also to determine whether it provides sufficient dosimetric benefits to warrant further clinical investigation in future SABR (Stereotactic Ablative Body Radiation) related clinical studies.
Full description
A phase II study to assess safety and efficacy of the spacer injection process, ability of the spacer to effectively provide the space necessary to reduce acute events in the rectum, and also meet the SABR based rectal constraints, and to monitor stability of this process during SABR. Unlike IMRT, which uses smaller dose/fraction, when using such high dose/fraction, even a few mm of shift in spacer positioning may impact the dose that the rectum receives, and therefore, a rigorous study of stability of material during the SABR treatments will need to be determined. If there is some shift, by doing this study, we may be able to determine the margin of error that will be necessary in considering rectal organ dosimetry, based on the possible shift in positiong that may occur with the spacer over time.
As the SABR therapy is strictly local, we will select for patients with prostate cancer locally confined to the prostate gland. As such, we will select eligibility criteria of low risk patients to minimize risk of extraprostatic spread, seminal vesicle invasion, and nodal spread. Hormonal therapy may also be used to shrink prostates that are massively enlarged as this may also help further reduce length of rectum that will be irradiated. As the primary toxicity will likely be mucosal damage, we will avoid enrolling patients with pre-existing mucosal dysfunction (including those with previous radiation, TURP, very large prostate glands, inflammatory bowel disease) and immunosuppressed individuals based on our phase I experience[13]. In this way, patients will be uniformly selected in a fashion that would identify patients likely to receive benefit from the therapy.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Subjects who have had previous pelvic radiotherapy or have had chemotherapy or surgery for prostate cancer.
Subjects who have plans to receive other concomitant or post treatment adjuvant antineoplastic therapy while on this protocol including surgery, cryotherapy, conventionally fractionated radiotherapy, hormonal therapy, or chemotherapy given as part of the treatment of prostate cancer.
Subjects who have undergone previous transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) or cryotherapy to the prostate. Subjects who have significant urinary obstructive symptoms; AUA score must be ≤15 (alpha blockers allowed).
Subjects who have a history of significant psychiatric illness.
Men of reproductive potential who do not agree that they or their partner will use an effective contraceptive method such as condom/diaphragm and spermacidal foam, intrauterine device (IUD), or prescription birth control pills.
Prior invasive malignancy (except non-melanomatous skin cancer) unless disease free for a minimum of 3 years (e.g., carcinoma in situ of the breast, oral cavity, or cervix are all permissible).
Severe, active co-morbidity, defined as follows:
Subjects with a known allergy to polyethylene glycol hydrogel (spacer material) or contraindication to spacer products (Duraseal or SpaceOAR).
Subjects with evidence of extraprostatic extension (T3a) or seminal vesicle involvement (T3b) on clinical evaluation.
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44 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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